The measure allows for unlimited possession and growth of marijuana and opens the door for the state to expunge marijuana-related criminal records.

The state voted to legalize medical weed in 2016, but it has not yet been made available to the public, as officials are still licensing dispensaries and growing facilities.

ADVERTISEMENT

David Owen, a University of North Dakota student who is leading the measure, told the Grand Forks Herald that he is pushing for legalization as a criminal justice issue.

“Because of a plant … they are now barred for the rest of their life from ever really achieving what they could be,” he told the paper. “And that is the real crime of the war on drugs.”

Opposition to the measure is coming largely from law enforcement. The North Dakota Sheriff’s and Deputies Association passed a resolution opposing the legalization of recreational marijuana.

Gov. Doug Burgum (R) said he supports decriminalization of the drug at the federal level, according to the Herald.

Recreational marijuana is currently legal in nine states and Washington, D.C., and medical pot is legal in 29. Some major cities, including New York, have also taken action to reduce prosecution of marijuana cases.